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Riley, Barth B.; Dennis, Michael L.; Conrad, Kendon J. – Applied Psychological Measurement, 2010
This simulation study sought to compare four different computerized adaptive testing (CAT) content-balancing procedures designed for use in a multidimensional assessment with respect to measurement precision, symptom severity classification, validity of clinical diagnostic recommendations, and sensitivity to atypical responding. The four…
Descriptors: Simulation, Computer Assisted Testing, Adaptive Testing, Comparative Analysis
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Singh, Ajay, Ed.; Yeh, Chia Jung, Ed.; Blanchard, Sheresa, Ed.; Anunciação, Luis, Ed. – IGI Global, 2021
Rehabilitation professionals working with students with disabilities and the families of those students face unique challenges in providing inclusive services to special education student populations. There needs to be a focus on adaptive teaching methods that provide quality experience for students with varying disabilities to promote student…
Descriptors: Students with Disabilities, Inclusion, Special Education, Teaching Methods
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Guo, Hongwen; Liu, Jinghua; Dorans, Neil; Feigenbaum, Miriam – ETS Research Report Series, 2011
Maintaining score stability is crucial for an ongoing testing program that administers several tests per year over many years. One way to stall the drift of the score scale is to use an equating design with multiple links. In this study, we use the operational and experimental SAT® data collected from 44 administrations to investigate the effect…
Descriptors: Equated Scores, College Entrance Examinations, Reliability, Testing Programs
Weaver, Keshia – Online Submission, 2011
Standardized testing has been a very important issue in education today. Many schools use the testing score to determine whether a child should continue to the next grade level. As we review the methods teachers use to prepare students for these types of tests, the amount of instruction time utilized to cover test materials, and the level of…
Descriptors: Testing, Standardized Tests, Academic Achievement, Methods Teachers
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Dueck, Myron – Educational Leadership, 2011
Dueck recounts how, as a high school history teacher, he began to allow students to retake all or part of their end-of-unit tests. Influenced by the work of Rick Stiggins, Dueck prepared students for tests better by focusing on three questions Stiggins says students should be able to answer for themselves: Where am I going in this unit?, Where am…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Teaching Methods, Evaluation, Scores
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Vervliet, Bram; Iberico, Carlos; Vervoort, Ellen; Baeyens, Frank – Learning and Motivation, 2011
Generalization gradients have been investigated widely in animal conditioning experiments, but much less so in human predictive learning tasks. Here, we apply the experimental design of a recent study on conditioned fear generalization in humans (Lissek et al., 2008) to a predictive learning task, and examine the effects of a number of relevant…
Descriptors: Animals, Research Design, Testing, Conditioning
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Peer, Eyal; Gamliel, Eyal – Practical Assessment, Research & Evaluation, 2011
When respondents answer paper-and-pencil (PP) questionnaires, they sometimes modify their responses to correspond to previously answered items. As a result, this response bias might artificially inflate the reliability of PP questionnaires. We compared the internal consistency of PP questionnaires to computerized questionnaires that presented a…
Descriptors: Response Style (Tests), Questionnaires, Reliability, Undergraduate Students
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Fulmer, Gavin W. – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2011
School accountability decisions based on standardized tests hinge on the degree of alignment of the test with the state's standards documents. Yet, there exist no established criteria for judging strength of alignment. Previous measures of alignment among tests, standards, and teachers' instruction have yielded mixed results that are difficult to…
Descriptors: Computation, Alignment (Education), Hypothesis Testing, Scoring Rubrics
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Holland, Bart K. – Teaching Statistics: An International Journal for Teachers, 2011
Distributions are the basis for an enormous amount of theoretical and applied work in statistics. While there are formal definitions of distributions and many formulas to characterize them, it is important that students at first get a clear introduction to this basic concept. For many of them, neither words nor formulas can match the power of a…
Descriptors: Hypothesis Testing, Probability, Statistics, College Mathematics
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Palmer, Alexis; Baroody, Arthur J. – Cognition and Instruction, 2011
A mother tracked her preschooler's number word development daily from 18 to 49 months of age. Naturalistic observations were supplemented with observations during structured (Kumon) training and microgenetic testing. The boy's everyday use of "two" did not become highly reliable and selective for 10 months (at 28 months), emerged later than that…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Numbers, Number Concepts, Concept Mapping
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Hannon, Erin E.; Soley, Gaye; Levine, Rachel S. – Developmental Science, 2011
Effects of culture-specific experience on musical rhythm perception are evident by 12 months of age, but the role of culture-general rhythm processing constraints during early infancy has not been explored. Using a habituation procedure with 5- and 7-month-old infants, we investigated effects of temporal interval ratio complexity on discrimination…
Descriptors: Music Education, Intervals, Music, Familiarity
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Baylor, Carolyn; Hula, William; Donovan, Neila J.; Doyle, Patrick J.; Kendall, Diane; Yorkston, Kathryn – American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 2011
Purpose: To present a primarily conceptual introduction to item response theory (IRT) and Rasch models for speech-language pathologists (SLPs). Method: This tutorial introduces SLPs to basic concepts and terminology related to IRT as well as the most common IRT models. The article then continues with an overview of how instruments are developed…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Test Construction, Adaptive Testing, Measures (Individuals)
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Chawla, Deepak; Joshi, Himanshu – Learning Organization, 2011
Purpose: This paper aims to report the preliminary findings of the difference in learning organization (LO) practices across industries. It also reports the impact of knowledge management (KM) dimensions on LO and whether this impact is different across manufacturing, IT and IT-enabled services (ITES) and power generation and distribution in…
Descriptors: Knowledge Management, Student Attitudes, Industry, Foreign Countries
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Wang, Lijuan; Zhang, Zhiyong – Structural Equation Modeling: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2011
This study investigated influences of censored data on mediation analysis. Mediation effect estimates can be biased and inefficient with censoring on any one of the input, mediation, and output variables. A Bayesian Tobit approach was introduced to estimate and test mediation effects with censored data. Simulation results showed that the Bayesian…
Descriptors: Statistical Analysis, Mediation Theory, Censorship, Bayesian Statistics
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Deiglmayr, Anne; Spada, Hans – Learning and Instruction, 2011
Groups typically have difficulties drawing inferences that integrate individuals' unique information (collaborative inferences) and thus yield a true assembly bonus. An experiment with 36 dyads of university-level students in four training conditions showed, particularly in untrained dyads, that collaborative inferences were less likely to be…
Descriptors: Testing, Inferences, Information Processing, Tutoring
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